BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
[0001] Gene delivery systems can be broadly classified into two groups: viral and nonviral.
Viral systems have major toxicity risks and have resulted in major complications and
death in clinical trials. Nonviral systems are far less efficient than viral approaches
but offer the potential to tailor applications to enhance specificity and potentially
decrease toxicity. Nonviral strategies can be broadly classified as lipid- based or
nonlipid- based. The strategy presented in this invention can be applied to any of
the existing nonviral approaches, so all will be described here.
[0002] The simplest nonviral system is direct delivery of DNA. Due to the negative charge
of DNA, very little of the DNA actually enters the cell and most is degraded. Virtually
none of the DNA enters the nucleus without a nuclear targeting sequence in the strategy.
Conventionally, another factor is employed to enhance the efficiency of gene/product
delivery (DNA, RNA, or more recently protein therapeutics) either by mechanical effects
such as electroporation, ultrasound, "gene gun" and direct microinjection, or by charge
neutralization and chemical effects with agents such as calcium phosphate, polylysine,
and liposome preparations. In the latter strategies, charge neutralization has been
shown to increase nonspecific efficiencies several-fold over even chemical/mechanical
effects of liposome preparations alone. Based upon these and similar results, many
have concluded that DNA and RNA require charge neutralization for efficiency in cellular
uptake, since DNA's negative charge essentially precludes transport except by endolysis
with subsequent lysosome fusion (escaped with addition of other agents). Most transfection
agents actually use an excess of positive charge in ratios of 2-4 fold over the net
DNA negative charge. The resulting positive hybrid binds ionically to negatively-charged
cell surface proteoglycans and dramatically enhances subsequent uptake. Some transfection
agents seem to have a cellular tropism, most likely because of steric and charge patterns
that more effectively target particular proteoglycans, which vary in cell-type specific
patterns. Even with appropriate agents (i.e., correct tropism), charge neutralization
alone or in combination with liposomes remains extremely inefficient relative to viral
strategies. Thus, the community has identified a number of peptides and peptide fragments
which facilitate efficient entry of a complex into a cell and past any endolysosome
stage. Several such transport factors even allow efficient nuclear entry. In one process,
the transport factor is directly linked to the therapeutic product of interest (small
drug, gene, protein, etc). This approach requires that a new drug attached to the
transport factor be produced, purified and tested. In many cases, these hybrids will
actually constitute new drugs and will require full testing. Such a process results
in significant additional risk and expense. Alternately, a number of strategies merely
employ mixing of the agent nonspecifically (or even specifically at the surface) into
liposome preparations as carriers for a drug/DNA/factor. Although an improvement over
direct or simpler modalities in terms of efficiencies, these approaches remain inefficient
(relative to virus) and considerably more toxic than simple nonviral strategies. Part
of this inefficiency is due to poor nuclear translocation. As a result, strategies
have evolved to add nuclear translocation signals to the complex detailed above, either
as part of the therapeutic factor hybrid or as part of the liposome mixture. Additional
refinements have included efforts to reduce DNA/RNA/factor degradation.
[0003] Perhaps the most important refinements in the basic strategies presented above have
included specific ligands or other targeting agents together with the therapeutic
factor. These strategies offer the potential for greatly reduced nonspecific toxicity
and substantial improvements in efficiency, particularly when combined with efficiency
agents described as above. However, the current strategies rely on covalent linkages
to a single carrier and thus necessitate a specific synthesis (to assure that steric
considerations in a degree of substitution scheme don't favor a single factor over
the others-i.e., to assure that each efficiency factor and each imaging moiety, and
each targeting moiety is present on the backbone). This renders virtually impossible
a number of specific constructs (for example, sialyl-lewis X and an Fab fragment to
a surface antigen, since steric limitations would prevent efficient binding of one
or the other in most schemes, and in turn would interfere with efficiency factors).
While promising in concept, these approaches represent expensive, very low yield (in
terms of synthesis), and unproven solutions to this problem.
[0004] As must be evident, with each stage of development in nonviral gene and factor delivery,
problems have been encountered and, in the next stage, solved with an added degree
of complexity. Each improvement represented an incremental step over the prior standard.
However, the added complexity brings risk from a patient-care standpoint and inefficiency
and expense from a production standpoint. These barriers have led to greatly decreased
enthusiasm for these otherwise promising potential therapies.
[0005] What is needed are new methods and compositions that are broadly applicable to compositions
of diverse therapeutic or cosmoceutic agents, that can be targeted or imaged to maximize
delivery to a particular site. Surprisingly, the present invention provides such compositions
and methods.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
[0006] In one aspect, the present invention provides a composition comprising a non-covalent
association complex of:
- a) a positively-charged backbone; and
- b) at least two members selected from:
- i) a first negatively-charged backbone having a plurality of attached imaging moieties;
- ii) a second negatively-charged backbone having a plurality of attached targeting
agents;
- iii) at least one member selected from RNA, DNA, ribozymes, modified oligonucleotides
and cDNA encoding a selected transgene;
- iv) DNA encoding at least one persistence factor; and
- v) a third negatively-charged backbone having a plurality of attached biological agents;
wherein the association complex carries a net positive charge and at least one of
the two members from group b) is selected from groups i), iii) or v).
[0007] The biological agents, in this aspect of the invention, can be either a therapeutic
agent or a cosmoceutic agent. Alternatively, candidate agents can be used to determine
in vivo efficacy in these non-covalent association complexes.
[0008] In another aspect, the present invention provides a composition comprising a non-covalent
association complex of a positively-charged backbone having at least one attached
efficiency group and at least one nucleic acid member selected from the group consisting
of RNA, DNA, ribozymes, modified oligonucleotides and cDNA encoding a selected transgene.
[0009] In another aspect, the present invention provides a method for delivery of a biological
agent to a cell surface in a subject, said method comprising administering to said
subject a composition as described above.
[0010] In yet another aspect, the present invention provides a method for preparing a pharmaceutical
or cosmoceutical composition, the method comprising combining a positively charged
backbone component and at least two members selected from:
- i) a negatively-charged backbone having a plurality of attached imaging moieties;
- ii) a negatively-charged backbone having a plurality of attached targeting agents;
- iii) at least member selected from RNA, DNA, ribozymes, modified oligonucleotides
and cDNA encoding a selected transgene;
- iv) DNA encoding at least one persistence factor; and
- v) a negatively-charged backbone having a plurality of attached therapeutic or cosmoceutic
agents;
with a pharmaceutically or cosmoceutically acceptable carrier to form a non-covalent
association complex having a net positive charge, with the proviso that at least one
of said two members from groups i) through v) is selected from groups i), iii) or
v).
[0011] In still another aspect, the present invention provides a kit for formulating a pharmaceutical
or cosmoceutical delivery composition, the kit comprising a positively charged backbone
component and at least two components selected from groups i) through v) above, along
with instructions for preparing the delivery composition.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0012]
Figure 1 provides a schematic representation the components used in the invention.
Figure 2 provides a schematic representation of several embodiments of the invention.
Figures 3-10 provide photographs depicting transdermal delivery of a therapeutic formulation
as described in Example 4.
Figures 11-12 provide photographs depicting targeting of a therapeutic formulation
as described in Example 5.
DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
General
[0013] The present invention provides a component-based system for selective, persistent,
delivery of imaging agents, genes or other therapeutic agents. Individual features
for the compositions can be selected by designating desired components in bedside
formulations. Additionally, imaging and specific targeting moieties are provided on
separate negatively charged backbones which will form a non-covalent ionic association
with a positive backbone. By placing these components on a negatively charged backbone,
the invention obviates the need for attaching components in precise locations on a
positive backbone as employed in other strategies (increasing complexity and expense
and decreasing efficiency to a level that no successful combination has yet been reported
due to steric limitations). Further understanding of the invention is provided with
reference to Figure 1. In this figure, the components are shown as (1) a solid backbone
having attached positively charged groups (also referred to as efficiency groups shown
as darkened circles attached to a darkened bar), for example (Gly)
n1-(Arg)
n2 (wherein the subscript n1 is an integer of from 3 to about 5, and the subscript n2
is an odd integer of from about 7 to about 17) or TAT domains; (2) a short negatively
charged backbone having attached imaging moieties (open triangles attached to a light
bar); (3) a short negatively charged backbone having attached targeting agents and/or
therapeutic agents (open circles attached to a light bar); (4) an oligonucleotide,
RNA, DNA or cDNA (light cross hatched bar); and (5) DNA encoding persistence factors
(dark cross hatched bar). Figure 2 illustrates various examples of multicomponent
compositions wherein the groups are depicted as set out in Figure 1. For example,
in Figure 2, a first multi-component composition is illustrated in which a positively
charged backbone has associated an imaging component, a targeting component, an oligonucleotide
and a persistence factor. A second multi-component composition is illustrated which
is designed for diagnostic/prognostic imaging. In this composition the positively
charged backbone is complexed with both imaging components and targeting components.
Finally, a third multi-component system is illustrated which is useful for gene delivery.
In this system, an association complex is formed between a positively charged backbone,
a targeting component, a gene of interest and DNA encoding a persistence factor. The
present invention, described more fully below, provides a number of additional compositions
useful in therapeutic and diagnostic programs.
Description of the Embodiments
Compositions
[0014] In view of the above, the present invention provides in one aspect a composition
comprising a non-covalent association complex of:
- a) a positively-charged backbone; and
- b) at least two members selected from:
- i) a first negatively-charged backbone having a plurality of attached imaging moieties;
- ii) a second negatively-charged backbone having a plurality of attached targeting
agents;
- iii) at least one member selected from RNA, DNA, ribozymes, modified oligonucleotides
and cDNA encoding a selected transgene;
- iv) DNA encoding at least one persistence factor; and
- v) a third negatively-charged backbone having a plurality of attached biological agents;
wherein the association complex carries a net positive charge and at least one of
the two members from group b) is selected from groups i), iii) or v).
[0015] In one group of embodiments, the composition comprises at least three members selected
from groups i) through v). In another group of embodiments, the composition comprises
at least one member from each of groups i), ii), iii) and iv). In yet another group
of embodiments, the composition comprises at least one member from each of groups
i) and ii). And in another group of embodiments, the composition comprises at least
one member from each of groups ii), iii) and iv).
[0016] Preferably, the positively-charged backbone has a length of from about 1 to 4 times
the combined lengths of the members from group b). Alternatively, the positively charged
backbone has a charge ratio of from about 1 to 4 times the combined charge of the
members from group b). In some embodiments, the charge density is uniform and the
length and charge ratios are approximately the same. Size to size (length) ratios
can be determined based on molecular studies of the components or can be determined
from the masses of the components.
Positively charged backbone
[0017] The positively-charged backbone is typically a linear chain of atoms, either with
groups in the chain carrying a positive charge at physiological pH, or with groups
carrying a positive charge attached to side chains extending from the backbone. The
linear backbone is a hydrocarbon backbone which is, in some embodiments, interrupted
by heteroatoms selected from nitrogen, oxygen, sulfur, silicon and phosphorus. The
majority of backbone chain atoms are usually carbon. Additionally, the backbone will
often be a polymer of repeating units (e.g., amino acids, poly(ethyleneoxy), poly(propyleneamine),
and the like). In one group of embodiments, the positively charged backbone is a polypropyleneamine
wherein a number of the amine nitrogen atoms are present as ammonium groups (tetra-substituted)
carrying a positive charge. In another group of embodiments, the backbone has attached
a plurality of sidechain moieties that include positively charged groups (e.g., ammonium
groups, pyridinium groups, phosphonium groups, sulfonium groups, guanidinium groups,
or amidinium groups). The sidechain moieties in this group of embodiments can be placed
at spacings along the backbone that are consistent in separations or variable. Additionally,
the length of the sidechains can be similar or dissimilar. For example, in one group
of embodiments, the sidechains can be linear or branched hydrocarbon chains having
from one to twenty carbon atoms and terminating at the distal end (away from the backbone)
in one of the above-noted positively charged groups.
[0018] In one group of embodiments, the positively charged backbone is a polypeptide having
multiple positively charged sidechain groups (e.g., lysine, arginine, ornithine, homoarginine,
and the like). One of skill in the art will appreciate that when amino acids are used
in this portion of the invention, the sidechains can have either the D-or L-form (R
or S configuration) at the center of attachment.
[0019] Alternatively, the backbone can be an analog of a polypeptide such as a peptoid.
See, for example,
Kessler, Angew. Chem. Int. Ed. Engl. 32:543 (1993);
Zuckermann et al. Chemtracts-Macromol. Chem. 4:80 (1992); and
Simon et al. Proc. Nat'l. Acad. Sci. USA 89:9367 (1992)). Briefly, a peptoid is a polyglycine in which the sidechain is attached to the
backbone nitrogen atoms rather than the α-carbon atoms. As above, a portion of the
sidechains will typically terminate in a positively charged group to provide a positively
charged backbone component. Synthesis of peptoids is described in, for example,
U.S. Patent No. 5,877,278. As the term is used herein, positively charged backbones that have a peptoid backbone
construction are considered "non-peptide" as they are not composed of amino acids
having naturally occurring sidechains at the α-carbon locations.
[0020] A variety of other backbones can be used employing, for example, steric or electronic
mimics of polypeptides wherein the amide linkages of the peptide are replaced with
surrogates such as ester linkages, thioamides (-CSNH-), reversed thioamide (-NHCS-),
aminomethylene (-NHCH
2-) or the reversed methyleneamino (-CH
2NH-) groups, keto-methylene (-COCH
2-) groups, phosphinate (-PO
2RCH
2-), phosphonamidate and phosphonamidate ester (-PO
2RNH-), reverse peptide (-NHCO-), trans-alkene (-CR=CH-), fluoroalkene (-CF=CH-), dimethylene
(-CH
2CH
2-), thioether (-CH
2S-), hydroxyethylene (-CH(OH)CH
2-), methyleneoxy (-CH
2O-), tetrazole (CN
4), sulfonamido (-SO
2NH-), methylenesulfonamido (-CHRSO
2NH-), reversed sulfonamide (-NHSO
2-), and backbones with malonate and/or gem-diamino-alkyl subunits, for example, as
reviewed by
Fletcher et al. ((1998) Chem. Rev. 98:763) and detailed by references cited therein. Many of the foregoing substitutions result
in approximately isosteric polymer backbones relative to backbones formed from α-amino
acids.
[0021] In each of the backbones provided above, sidechain groups can be appended that carry
a positively charged group. For example, the sulfonamide-linked backbones (-SO
2NH- and -NHSO
2-) can have sidechain groups attached to the nitrogen atoms. Similarly, the hydroxyethylene
(-CH(OH)CH
2-) linkage can bear a sidechain group attached to the hydroxy substituent. One of
skill in the art can readily adapt the other linkage chemistries to provide positively
charged sidechain groups using standard synthetic methods.
[0022] In a particularly preferred embodiment, the positively charged backbone is a polypeptide
having branching groups (also referred to as efficiency groups) comprising -(gly)
n1-(arg)
n2, HIV-TAT or fragments thereof, in which the subscript n1 is an integer of from 0
to 20, more preferably 0 to 8, still more preferably 2 to 5, and the subscript n2
is an odd integer of from about 5 to about 25, more preferably about 7 to about 17,
most preferably about 7 to about 13. Still further preferred are those embodiments
in which the HIV-TAT fragment has the formula (gly)
p-RGRDDRRQRRR-(gly)
q or (gly)
p-YGRKKRRQRRR-(gly)
q wherein the subscripts p and q are each independently an integer of from 0 to 20
and the fragment is attached to the backbone via either the C-terminus or the N-terminus
of the fragment. Preferred HIV-TAT fragments are those in which the subscripts p and
q are each independently integers of from 0 to 8, more preferably 2 to 5.
[0023] In another particularly preferred embodiment, the backbone portion is a polylysine
and positively charged branching groups are attached to the lysine sidechain amino
groups. The polylysine used in this particularly preferred embodiment can be any of
the commercially available (Sigma Chemical Company, St. Louis, Missouri, USA) polylysines
such as, for example, polylysine having MW > 70,000, polylysine having MW of 70,000
to 150,000, polylysine having MW 150,000 to 300,000 and polylysine having MW > 300,000.
The appropriate selection of a polylysine will depend on the remaining components
of the composition and will be sufficient to provide an overall net positive charge
to the composition and provide a length that is preferably from one to four times
the combined length of the negatively charged components. Preferred positively charged
branching groups or efficiency groups include, for example, -gly-gly-gly-arg-arg-arg-arg-arg-arg-arg
(-Gly
3Arg
7) or HIV-TAT.
Other components
[0024] In addition to the positively charged backbone component, the compositions of the
present invention comprise at least two components from the following:
- i) a negatively-charged backbone having a plurality of attached imaging moieties;
- ii) a negatively-charged backbone having a plurality of attached targeting moieties;
- iii) at least one RNA, DNA, ribozyme, modified oligonucleotide or a cDNA encoding
a transgene of interest;
- iv) DNA encoding at least one persistence factor; and
- v) a negatively-charged backbone having a plurality of attached therapeutic agents.
[0025] The negatively-charged backbones used to carry the imaging moieties, targeting moieties
and therapeutic agents can be a variety of backbones (similar to those described above)
having multiple groups carrying a negative charge at physiological pH. Suitable negatively-charged
groups are carboxylic acids, phosphinic, phosphonic or phosphoric acids, sulfinic
or sulfonic acids, and the like. In some embodiments, the negatively-charged backbone
will be an oligonucleic acid. In other embodiments, the negatively-charged backbone
is an oligosaccharide (e.g., dextran). In still other embodiments, the negatively-charged
backbone is a polypeptide (e.g., poly glutamic acid, poly aspartic acid, or a polypeptide
in which glutamic acid or aspartic acid residues are interrupted by uncharged amino
acids). The moieties described in more detail below (imaging moieties, targeting agents,
and therapeutic agents) can be attached to a backbone having these pendent groups,
typically via ester linkages. Alternatively, amino acids which interrupt negatively-charged
amino acids or are appended to the terminus of the negatively-charged backbone, can
be used to attach imaging moieties and targeting moieties via, for example, disulfide
linkages (through a cysteine residue), amide linkages, ether linkages (through serine
or threonine hydroxyl groups) and the like.
imaging moieties
[0026] A variety of diagnostic or imaging moieties are useful in the present invention and
are present in an effective amount that will depend on the condition being diagnosed
or imaged, the route of administration, the sensitivity of the agent and device used
for detection of the agent, and the like.
[0027] Examples of suitable imaging or diagnostic agents include radiopaque contrast agents,
paramagnetic contrast agents, superparamagnetic contrast agents, CT contrast agents
and other contrast agents. For example, radiopaque contrast agents (for X-ray imaging)
will include inorganic and organic iodine compounds (e.g., diatrizoate), radiopaque
metals and their salts (e.g., silver, gold, platinum and the like) and other radiopaque
compounds (e.g., calcium salts, barium salts such as barium sulfate, tantalum and
tantalum oxide). Suitable paramagnetic contrast agents (for MR imaging) include gadolinium
diethylene triaminepentaacetic acid (Gd-DTPA) and its derivatives, and other gadolinium,
manganese, iron, dysprosium, copper, europium, erbium, chromium, nickel and cobalt
complexes, including complexes with 1,4,7,10-tetraazacyclododecane-N,N',N",N"'-tetraacetic
acid (DOTA), ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid (EDTA), 1,4,7,10-tetraazacyclododecane-N,N',N"-triacetic
acid (DO3A), 1,4,7-triazacyclononane-N,N',N"-triacetic acid (NOTA), 1,4,8,11-tetraazacyclotetradecane-N,N',N",N"'-tetraacetic
acid (TETA), hydroxybenzylethylene-diamine diacetic acid (HBED) and the like. Suitable
superparamagnetic contrast agents (for MR imaging) include magnetites, superparamagnetic
iron oxides, monocrystalline iron oxides, particularly complexed forms of each of
these agents that can be attached to a negatively charged backbone. Still other suitable
imaging agents are the CT contrast agents including iodinated and noniodinated and
ionic and nonionic CT contrast agents, as well as contrast agents such as spin-labels
or other diagnostically effective agents.
[0028] Other examples of diagnostic agents include marker genes that encode proteins that
are readily detectable when expressed in a cell, including, but not limited to, β-galactosidase,
green fluorescent protein, blue fluorescent protein, luciferase, and the like. A wide
variety of labels may be employed, such as radionuclides, fluors, enzymes, enzyme
substrates, enzyme cofactors, enzyme inhibitors, ligands (particularly haptens), and
the like. Still other useful substances are those labeled with radioactive species
or components, such as
99mTc glucoheptonate.
targeting agents
[0029] A variety of targeting agents are useful in the compositions described herein. Typically,
the targeting agents are attached to a negatively-charged backbone as described for
the imaging moieties above. The targeting agents can be any element that makes it
possible to direct the transfer of a nucleic acid, therapeutic agent or another component
of the composition to a particular site. The targeting agent can be an extracellular
targeting agent, which allows, for example, a nucleic acid transfer to be directed
towards certain types of cells or certain desired tissues (tumor cells, liver cells,
hematopoietic cells, and the like). Such an agent can also be an intracellular targeting
agent, allowing a therapeutic agent to be directed towards particular cell compartments
(e.g, mitochondria, nucleus, and the like).
[0030] The targeting agent or agents are preferably linked, covalently or non-covalently,
to a negatively-charged backbone according to the invention. According to a preferred
mode of the invention, the targeting agent is covalently attached to an oligonucleotide
that serves as a negatively-charged backbone component, preferably via a linking group.
Methods of attaching targeting agents (as well as other biological agents) to nucleic
acids are well known to those of skill in the art using, for example, heterobifunctional
linking groups (see Pierce Chemical Catalog). In one group of embodiments, the targeting
agent is a fusogenic peptide for promoting cellular transfection, that is to say for
favoring the passage of the composition or its various elements across membranes,
or for helping in the egress from endosomes or for crossing the nuclear membrane.
The targeting agent can also be a cell receptor ligand for a receptor that is present
at the surface of the cell type, such as, for example, a sugar, transferrin, insulin
or asialo-orosomucoid protein. Such a ligand may also be one of intracellular type,
such as a nuclear location signal (nls) sequence which promotes the accumulation of
transfected DNA within the nucleus.
[0031] Other targeting agents useful in the context of the invention, include sugars, peptides,
hormones, vitamins, cytokines, oligonucleotides, lipids or sequences or fractions
derived from these elements and which allow specific binding with their corresponding
receptors. Preferably, the targeting agents are sugars and/or peptides such as antibodies
or antibody fragments, cell receptor ligands or fragments thereof, receptors or receptor
fragments, and the like. More preferably, the targeting agents are ligands of growth
factor receptors, of cytokine receptors, or of cell lectin receptors or of adhesion
protein receptors. The targeting agent can also be a sugar which makes it possible
to target lectins such as the asialoglycoprotein receptors, or alternatively an antibody
Fab fragment which makes it possible to target the Fc fragment receptor of immunoglobulins.
nucleic acids
[0032] In the compositions of the present invention, the nucleic acid can be either a deoxyribonucleic
acid or a ribonucleic acid, and can comprise sequences of natural or artificial origin.
More particularly, the nucleic acids used herein can include genomic DNA, cDNA, mRNA,
tRNA, rRNA, hybrid sequences or synthetic or semi-synthetic sequences. These nucleic
acids can be of human, animal, plant, bacterial, viral, etc. origin. Additionally,
the nucleic acids can be obtained by any technique known to those skilled in the art,
and in particular by the screening of banks, by chemical synthesis or by mixed methods
including the chemical or enzymatic modification of sequences obtained by the screening
of banks. Still further, the nucleic acids can be incorporated into vectors, such
as plasmid vectors.
[0033] The deoxyribonucleic acids used in the present invention can be single- or double-stranded.
These deoxyribonucleic acids can also code for therapeutic genes, sequences for regulating
transcription or replication, antisense sequences, regions for binding to other cell
components, etc. Suitable therapeutic genes are essentially any gene which codes for
a protein product having a therapeutic effect. The protein product thus encoded may
be a protein, polypeptide, a peptide, or the like. The protein product can, in some
instances, be homologous with respect to the target cell (that is to say a product
which is normally expressed in the target cell when the latter exhibits no pathology).
In this manner, the use of suitable nucleic acids can increase the expression of a
protein, making it possible, for example, to overcome an insufficient expression in
the cell. Alternatively, the present invention provides compositions and methods for
the expression of a protein which is inactive or weakly active due to a modification,
or alternatively of overexpressing the protein. The therapeutic gene may thus code
for a mutant of a cell protein, having increased stability, modified activity, etc.
The protein product may also be heterologous with respect to the target cell. In this
case, an expressed protein may, for example, make up or provide an activity which
is deficient in the cell, enabling it to combat a pathology or to stimulate an immune
response.
[0034] More particularly, nucleic acids useful in the present invention are those that code
for enzymes, blood derivatives, hormones, lymphokines, interleukins, interferons,
TNF, growth factors, neurotransmitters or their precursors or synthetic enzymes, or
trophic factors: BDNF, CNTF, NGF, IGF, GMF, aFGF, bFGF, VEGF, NT3, NT5, HARP/pleiotrophin;
the proteins involved in the metabolism of lipids, of apolipoprotein-types selected
from apolipoproteins A-I, A-II, A-IV, B, C-I, C-II, C-III, D, E, F, G, H, J and apo(a),
metabolic enzymes such as, for example, lipoprotein lipase, hepatic lipase, lecithin
cholesterol acyltransferase, 7-α-cholesterol hydroxylase, phosphatidic acid phosphatase,
or lipid transfer proteins such as cholesterol ester transfer protein and phospholipid
transfer protein, a protein for binding HDLs or a receptor selected from, for example,
LDL receptors, chylomicron-remnant receptors and scavenger receptors, dystrophin or
minidystrophin, GAX protein, CFTR protein associated with mucoviscidosis, tumor-suppressant
genes: p53, Rb, Rap1A, DCC, k-rev; protein factors involved in coagulation: factors
VII, VIII, IX; or the nucleic acids can be those genes involved in DNA repair, suicide
genes (thymidine kinase, cytosine deaminase), genes encoding thrombomodulin, α1-antitrypsin,
tissue plasminogen activator, superoxide dismutase, elastase, matrix metalloproteinase,
and the like.
[0035] The therapeutic genes useful in the present invention can also be an antisense sequence
or a gene whose expression in the target cell makes it possible to control the expression
of genes or the transcription of cellular mRNA. Such sequences can, for example, be
transcribed in the target cell info complementary RNA of cellular mRNA and thus block
their translation into protein, according to the technique described in patent
EP 140,308. The antisense sequences also comprise the sequences coding for ribozymes which are
capable of selectively destroying target RNA (see
EP 321,201).
[0036] As indicated above, the nucleic acid may also contain one or more genes coding for
an antigenic peptide, capable of generating an immune response in humans or animals.
In this particular embodiment, the invention thus makes it possible to produce either
vaccines or immunotherapeutic treatments applied to humans or to animals, in particular
against microorganisms, viruses or cancers. They may in particular be antigenic peptides
specific for Epstein Barr virus, for HIV virus, for hepatitis B virus (see
EP 185,573), for pseudo-rabies virus or alternatively specific for tumors (see
EP 259,212).
[0037] Preferably, the nucleic acid also comprises sequences that allow the expression of
the therapeutic gene and/or of the gene coding for the antigenic peptide in the desired
cell or organ. These can be sequences that are naturally responsible for expression
of the gene considered when these sequences are capable of functioning in the infected
cell. The nucleic acids can also be sequences of different origin (responsible for
the expression of other proteins, or even synthetic proteins). In particular, the
nucleic acids can contain promoter sequences for eukaryotic or viral genes. For example,
the promoter sequences can be those derived from the genome of the cell which it is
desired to infect. Similarly, thepromoter sequences can be derived from the genome
of a virus, e.g., the promoters of genes EIA, MLP, CMV, RSV, etc. In addition, these
expression sequences may be modified by addition of activation sequences, regulation
sequences, etc.
[0038] Moreover, the nucleic acid may also contain, in particular upstream of the therapeutic
gene, a signal sequence which directs the therapeutic product synthesized into the
secretion pathways of the target cell. This signal sequence may be the natural signal
sequence of the therapeutic product, but it may also be any other functional signal
sequence, or an artificial signal sequence.
DNA encoding at least one persistence factor
biological agents
[0040] A variety of biological agents, including both therapeutic and cosmoceutic agents,
are useful in the present invention and are present in an effective amount that will
depend on the condition being treated, prophylactically or otherwise, the route of
administration, the efficacy of the agent and patient's size and susceptibility to
the treatment regimen.
[0041] Suitable therapeutic agents that can be attached to a negatively charged backbone
can be found in essentially any class of agents, including, for example, analgesic
agents, anti-asthmatic agents, antibiotics, antidepressant agents, anti-diabetic agents,
antifungal agents, antiemetics, antihypertensives, anti-impotence agents, anti-inflammatory
agents, antineoplastic agents, anti-HIV agents, antiviral agents, anxiolytic agents,
contraception agents, fertility agents, antithrombotic agents, prothrombotic agents,
hormones, vaccines, immunosuppressive agents, vitamins and the like.
[0042] Suitable cosmeceutic agents include, for example, epidermal growth factor (EGF),
as well as human growth hormone, antioxidants, and BOTOX.
[0043] More particularly, therapeutic agents useful in the present invention include such
analgesics as lidocaine, novacaine, bupivacaine, procaine, tetracaine, benzocaine,
cocaine, mepivacaine, etidocaine, proparacaine ropivacaine, prilocaine and the like;
anti-asthmatic agents such as azelastine, ketotifen, traxanox, corticosteroids, cromolyn,
nedocromil, albuterol, bitolterol mesylate, pirbuterol, salmeterol, terbutyline, theophylline
and the like; antibiotic agents such as neomycin, streptomycin, chloramphenicol, norfloxacin,
ciprofloxacin, trimethoprim, sulfamethyloxazole, the β-lactam antibiotics, tetracycline,
and the like; antidepressant agents such as nefopam, oxypertine, imipramine, trazadone
and the like; anti-diabetic agents such as biguanidines, sulfonylureas, and the like;
antiemetics and antipsychotics such as chloropromazine, fluphenazine, perphenazine,
proclorperazine, promethazine, thiethylperazine, triflupromazine, haloperidol, scopolamine,
diphenidol, trimethobenzamide, and the like; neuromuscular agents such as atracurium
mivacurium, rocuronium, succinylcholine, doxacurium, tubocurarine, and botulinum toxin
(BOTOX); antifungal agents such as amphotericin B, nystatin, candicidin, itraconazole,
ketoconazole, miconazole, clotrimazole, fluconazole, ciclopirox, econazole, naftifine,
terbinafine, griseofulvin and the like; antihypertensive agents such as propanolol,
propafenone, oxyprenolol, nifedipine, reserpine and the like; anti-impotence agents
such as nitric oxide donors and the like; anti-inflammatory agents including steroidal
anti-inflammatory agents such as cortisone, hydrocortisone, dexamethasone, prednisolone,
prednisone, fluazacort, and the like, as well as non-steroidal anti-inflammatory agents
such as indomethacin, ibuprofen, ramifenizone, prioxicam and the like; antineoplastic
agents such as adriamycin, cyclophosphamide, actinomycin, bleomycin, duanorubicin,
doxorubicin, epirubicin, mitomycin, rapamycin, methotrexate, fluorouracil, carboplatin,
carmustine (BCNU), cisplatin, etoposide, interferons, phenesterine, taxol (including
analogs and derivatives), camptothecin and derivatives thereof, vinblastine, vincristine
and the like; anti-HIV agents (e.g., antiproteolytics); antiviral agents such as amantadine,
methisazone, idoxuridine, cytarabine, acyclovir, famciclovir, ganciclovir, foscarnet,
sorivudine, trifluridine, valacyclovir, cidofovir, didanosine, stavudine, zalcitabine,
zidovudine, ribavirin, rimantatine and the like; anxiolytic agents such as dantrolene,
diazepam and the like; COX-2 inhibitors; contraception agents such as progestogen
and the like; antithrombotic agents such as GPIIb/IIIa inhibitors, tissue plasminogen
activators, streptokinase, urokinase, heparin and the like; prothrombotic agents such
as thrombin, factors V, VII, VIII and the like; hormones such as insulin, growth hormone,
prolactin, EGF (epidermal growth factor) and the like; immunosuppressive agents such
as cyclosporine, azathioprine, mizorobine, FK506, prednisone and the like; angiogenic
agents such as VEGF (vascular endothelial growth factor); vitamins such as A, D, E,
K and the like; and other therapeutically or medicinally active agents. See, for example,
GOODMAN & GILMAN'S THE PHARMACOLOGICAL BASIS OF THERAPEUTICS, Ninth Ed. Hardman, et
al., eds. McGraw-Hill, (1996).
[0044] In the most preferred embodiments, the biological agent is selected from insulin,
botulinum toxin (BOTOX), VEGF, EGF, antibodies to VEGF, and TGF-β1.
Negatively-charged backbones having attached imaging moieties. targeting agents or
therapeutic agents
[0045] For three of the above groups of components (imaging moieties, targeting agents and
therapeutic agents), the individual compounds are attached to a negatively charged
backbone. Typically, the attachment is via a linking group used to covalently attach
the particular agent to the backbone through functional groups present on the agent
as well as the backbone. A variety of linking groups are useful in this aspect of
the invention. See, for example,
Hermanson, Bioconjugate Techniques, Academic Press, San Diego, CA (1996);
Wong, S.S., Ed., Chemistry of Protein Conjugation and CrossLinking, CRC Press, Inc.,
Boca Raton, FL (1991);
Senter, et al., J. Org. Chem. 55:2975-78 (1990); and
Koneko, et al., Bioconjugate Chem. 2:133-141 (1991).
[0046] In some embodiments, the therapeutic, diagnostic or targeting agents will not have
an available functional group for attaching to a linking group, \ can be first modified
to incorporate, for example, a hydroxy, amino, or thiol substituent. Preferably, the
substituent is provided in a non-interfering portion of the agent, and can be used
to attach a linking group, and will not adversely affect the function of the agent.
[0047] In yet another aspect, the present invention provides compositions comprising a non-covalent
association complex of a positively-charged backbone having at least one attached
efficiency group and at least one nucleic acid member selected from the group consisting
of RNA, DNA, ribozymes, modified oligonucleotides and cDNA encoding a selected transgene.
In this aspect of the invention, the positively-charged backbone can be essentially
any of the positively-charged backbones described above, and will also comprise (as
with selected backbones above) at least one attached efficiency group. Suitable efficiency
groups include, for example, (Gly)
n1-(Arg)
n2 (wherein the subscript n1 is an integer of from 3 to about 5, and the subscript n2
is an odd integer of from about 7 to about 17) or TAT domains. Additionally, the nucleic
acids useful in this aspect of the invention are the same as have been described above.
Methods of Preparing the Compositions
[0048] In another aspect, the present invention provides a method for preparing a pharmaceutical
composition, the method comprising combining a positively charged backbone component
and at least two members selected from;
- i) a first negatively-charged backbone having a plurality of attached imaging moieties;
- ii) a second negatively-charged backbone having a plurality of attached targeting
agents;
- iii) at least one member selected from the group consisting of RNA, DNA, ribozymes,
modified oligonucleotides and cDNA encoding a selected transgene;
- iv) DNA encoding at least one persistence factor; and
- v) a third negatively-charged backbone having a plurality of attached therapeutic
agents;
with a pharmaceutically acceptable carrier to form a non-covalent association complex
having a net positive charge, with the proviso that at least one of the two members
from groups i) through v) is selected from groups i), iii) or v).
[0049] The broad applicability of the present invention is illustrated by the ease with
which a variety of pharmaceutical compositions can be formulated. Typically, the compositions
are prepared by mixing the positively charged backbone component with the desired
components of interest (e.g., DNA, targeting, imaging or therapeutic components) in
ratios and a sequence to obtain compositions having a variable net positive charge.
In many embodiments, the compositions can be prepared, for example, at bedside using
pharmaceutically acceptable carriers and diluents for administration of the composition.
Alternatively, the compositions can be prepared by suitable mixing of the components
and then lyophilized and stored (typically at room temperature or below) until used
or formulated into a suitable delivery vehicle.
[0050] The compositions can be formulated to provide mixtures suitable for topical, cutaneous,
oral, rectal, vaginal, parenteral, intranasal, intravenous, intramuscular, subcutaneous,
intraocular, transdermal, etc. administration. The pharmaceutical compositions of
the invention preferably contain a vehicle which is pharmaceutically acceptable for
an injectable formulation, in particular for direct injection into the desired organ,
or for topical administration (to skin and/or mucous membrane). They may in particular
be sterile, isotonic solutions or dry compositions, in particular freeze-dried compositions,
which, by addition, depending on the case, of sterilized water or of physiological
saline, allow injectable solutions to be made up. For example, the doses of nucleic
acid used for the injection and the number of administrations may be adapted according
to various parameters, and in particular according to the mode of administration used,
the pathology concerned, the gene to be expressed, or alternatively the desired duration
of the treatment.
Methods of Using the Compositions
Delivery methods
[0051] The compositions of the present invention can be delivered to a subject, cell or
target site,
either in vivo or
ex vivo using a variety of methods. In fact, any of the routes normally used for introducing
a composition into ultimate contact with the tissue to be treated can be used. Preferably,
the compositions will be administered with pharmaceutically acceptable carriers. Suitable
methods of administering such compounds are available and well known to those of skill
in the art, and, although more than one route can be used to administer a particular
composition, a particular route can often provide a more immediate and more effective
reaction than another route. Pharmaceutically acceptable carriers are determined in
part by the particular composition being administered, as well as by the particular
method used to administer the composition. Accordingly, there is a wide variety of
suitable formulations of pharmaceutical compositions of the present invention
(see, e.g., Remington's Pharmaceutical Sciences, 17th ed. 1985).
[0052] Administration can be, for example, intravenous, topical, intraperitoneal, subdermal,
subcutaneous, transcutaneous, intramuscular, oral, intra-joint parenteral, intranasal,
or by inhalation. Suitable sites of administration thus include, but are not limited
to, the skin, bronchium, gastrointestinal tract, eye and ear. The compositions typically
include a conventional pharmaceutical carrier or excipient and can additionally include
other medicinal agents, carriers, adjuvants, and the like. Preferably, the formulation
will be about 5% to 75% by weight of a composition of the invention, with the remainder
consisting of suitable pharmaceutical excipients. Appropriate excipients can be tailored
to the particular composition and route of administration by methods well known in
the art (
see, e.g., REMINGTON'S PHARMACEUTICAL SCIENCES, 18THED., Mack Publishing Co., Easton, PA (1990)).
[0053] The formulations can take the form of solid, semi-solid, lyophilized power, or liquid
dosage forms, such as, for example, tablets, pills, capsules, powders, solutions,
suspensions, emulsions, suppositories, retention enemas, creams, ointments, lotions,
aerosols or the like. In embodiments where the pharmaceutical composition takes the
form of a pill, tablet or capsule, the formulation can contain, along with the biologically
active composition, any of the following: a diluent such as lactose, sucrose, dicalcium
phosphate, and the like; a distintegrant such as starch or derivatives thereof; a
lubricant such as magnesium stearate and the like; and a binder such as starch, gum
acacia, polyvinylpyrrolidone, gelatin, cellulose and derivatives thereof. Compositions
can be presented in unit-dose or multi-dose sealed containers, such as ampules or
vials. Doses administered to a patient should be sufficient to effect a beneficial
therapeutic response in the patient over time.
[0054] In some embodiments, a sustained-release formulation can be administered to an organism
or to cells in culture and can carry the desired compositions. The sustained-release
composition can be administered to the tissue of an organism, for example, by injection.
By "sustained-release", it is meant that the composition, preferably one encoding
a transgene of interest or a therapeutic agent, is made available for uptake by surrounding
tissue or cells in culture for a period of time longer than would be achieved by administration
of the composition in a less viscous medium, for example, a saline solution.
[0055] The compositions, alone or in combination with other suitable components, can be
made into aerosol formulations (
i.e., they can be "nebulized") to be administered via inhalation. Aerosol formulations
can be placed into pressurized acceptable propellants, such as dichlorodifluoromethane,
propane, nitrogen, and the like. For delivery by inhalation, the compositions can
also be delivered as dry powder (e.g., Inhale Therapeutics).
[0056] Formulations suitable for parenteral administration, such as, for example, by intravenous,
intramuscular, intradermal, and subcutaneous routes, include aqueous and non-aqueous,
isotonic sterile injection solutions, which can contain antioxidants, buffers, bacteriostats,
and solutes that render the formulation isotonic with the blood of the intended recipient,
and aqueous and non-aqueous sterile suspensions that can include suspending agents,
solubilizers, thickening agents, stabilizers, and preservatives.
[0057] Other methods of administration include, but are not limited to, administration using
angioplastic balloons, catheters, and gel formations. Methods for angioplastic balloon,
catheter and gel formation delivery are well known in the art.
Imaging methods
[0058] One of skill in the art will understand that the compositions of the present invention
can by tailored for a variety of imaging uses. In one embodiment, virtual colonoscopy
can be performed using the component-based system for imaging. At present, virtual
colonoscopy involves essentially infusing contrast into a colon and visualizing the
images on CT, then reconstructing a 3-D image. Similar techniques could be employed
for MR. However, feces, mucous, and air all serve as contrast barriers and can give
an artificial surface to the colon wall reconstruction. Addition of a cellular-targeting
contrast would help overcome these barriers to provide a true wall reconstruction
and help avoid both false-positives and false-negatives. There are several ways that
the component-based system could be applied here. Most simply, the cationic efficiency
backbone could be applied with a single contrast agent (CT or MR). Thus, the cellular
surface layer could be visualized and any irregularities or obstructions detailed
in the image reconstruction. However, the component based system offers the additional
option of adding a specific second agent. This agent could consist of a the cationic
efficiency backbone, a different imaging moiety, and targeting components (for example
targeting two antigens characteristic of colon cancer). The imaging moieties (from
the simple to the diagnostic) could be selected so that one was CT contrast and the
other MR contrast, or so that both were MR contrast with one being a T2 agent and
the other a T1 agent. In this manner, the surface could be reconstructed as before,
and any regions specific for a tumor antigen could be visualized and overlayed on
the original reconstruction. Additionally, therapeutic agents could be incorporated
into the targeted diagnostic system as well. Similar strategies could be applied to
regional enteritis and ulcerative colitis (and again combined with therapy).
EXAMPLES
Example 1
[0059] This example illustrates the preparation and evaluation of a composition having a
positively charged backbone, a negatively charged backbone with attached imaging moieties,
and cDNA encoding a transgene. Evaluation is
in vitro.
[0060] The following components are prepared:
- 1. a positively charged backbone composed of polylysine with Gly3Arg7 linked via the side chain amino terminus of Lys to the carboxy terminus of Gly3Arg7 at a degree of saturation of 20%. A solution is prepared of the backbone moiety at
a concentration of 1.5 mg/mL in phosphate buffered saline (PBS).
- 2. cDNA expressing blue fluorescent protein under the control of a cytomegalovirus
(CMV) promoter is prepared and used at a 0.5 mg/mL concentration in PBS.
- 3. a dextran- DOTA- gadolinium complex (see, Casali, et al., Acad. Radiol. 5:S214-S218 (1998)) is used at a 1:2 dilution in PBS.
[0061] The following mixture (a) is prepared in triplicate: 100 µL of "2" above is mixed
with 60 µL of "3" above and diluted with 140 µL PBS, then vortexed for 45 seconds.
[0062] Three different tubes with the following are prepared:
(b) 400 µL "1" above, (c) 200 µL "1" above diluted with 200 µL PBS, and (d) 100 µL,
"1" above diluted with 300 µl PBS.
[0063] All three tubes are vortexed for 45 seconds. One tube of "a" is combined with each
of tubes "b," "c," and "d" and vortexed for 90 seconds. A 200 µL portion of each of
these combined mixtures is placed in a separate well (in triplicate) on a six-well
cell culture plate containing HA-VSMC cells (ATCC, Rockville, MD). Each well is prewashed
one time with dye-free, serum-free M-199 media prior to transfection. The cell/transfection
agent mixtures are incubated at 37°C in a humidified 10% CO
2 chamber for 4.5 hours, washed with M-199 media, then incubated with 10% FBS. Image
in MR spectroscopy for initial distribution immediately. After 24 hours, repeat spectroscopy,
then remove cells from plate and employ for FACS analysis for blue fluorescent protein
to determine efficiency of transfection.
Example 2
[0064] This example illustrates the preparation of a composition of the invention which
is an imaged tumor-specific complex carrying a cytotoxic gene.
[0065] The following components are prepared:
- 1. a positively charged backbone composed of polylysine with Gly3Arg7 linked via the side chain amino terminus of Lys to the carboxy terminus of Gly3Arg7 at a degree of saturation of 20%. A solution is prepared of the backbone moiety at
a concentration of 1.5 mg/mL in phosphate buffered saline (PBS).
- 2. cDNA expressing herpes simplex virus thymidine kinase gene under the control of
a cytomegalovirus (CMV) promoter is used at a 0.5 mg/mL concentration in PBS.
- 3. dextran- DOTA- gadolinium complex is used at a 1:2 dilution in PBS.
- 4. Conjugate Fab fragment specific for desired tumor antigen at a 5% saturation rate
to dextran of size range and concentration in PBS selected to afford 1:2 negative
charge ratio relative to component "2" above.
[0066] Prepare the following mixture (a) in triplicate: 100 µL of "2" above mixed with 60
µL of "3" above and 100 µL "4" above and diluted with 40 µL PBS and vortexed for 45
seconds. Prepare three different tubes: (b) 400 µL "1" above, (c) 200 µL "1" above
diluted with 200µL PBS, and (d) 100 µL "1" above diluted with 300 µL PBS. Vortex all
three for 45 seconds. Combine one tube of "a" with "b" and vortex for 90 seconds to
form mixture B. Combine one tube of "a" with "c" and vortex for 90 seconds to form
mixture C. Combine one tube of "a" with "d" and vortex for 90 seconds to form mixture
D. Use 200 µL of each mixture together with 200 µL of cold 30% pluronic F-127 (BASF).
Inject combined solution into potential space created by excisional biopsy of putative
tumor in vivo. Image in MR after implantation, after 1 day and after 3 days. Immediately
after implantation, begin gancyclovir systemic administration according to FDA guidelines.
This composite system provides diagnostic imaging of the desired tumor cells as well
as cytotoxic therapy for these same cells. Gel (pluronic) distribution is imaged at
time zero. After 24 hours, gel is degraded and contrast signal concentrates at sites
of residual tumor microinvasion as well as at seeded sites along drainage pathways.
Imaging of residual tumor is thus afforded. Gancyclovir activity will be concentrated
in areas of HSV-TK uptake, so that targeted therapy is also afforded in this system.
Monitoring of response to therapy is also afforded similarly by imaging.
Example 3
[0067] This example illustrates the use of the multi-component strategy for transfection
in cell culture.
[0068] In this example a 6-well plate was used to evaluate one iteration of the component-based
strategy. The positively charged backbone was assembled by conjugating -Gly
3Arg
7 to polylysine 150,000 via the carboxyl of the terminal glycine to the free amine
of the lysine sidechain at a degree of saturation of 18% (i.e., 18 out of each 100
lysine residues is conjugated to a -Gly
3Arg
7). The resultant backbone was designated NUNU-01.
[0069] The following mixtures were prepared:
- 1) polylysine (150,000) at a 4:1 charge ratio to a 0.5 mg/mL solution of a plasmid
expressing blue fluorescent protein driven by a CMV promoter.
- 2) NUNU-01 at a ratio of 15:1 to a 0.5 mg/mL solution of a plasmid expressing blue
fluorescent protein driven by a CMV promoter.
- 3) NUNU-01 at a ratio of 10:1 1 to a 0.5 mg/mL solution of a plasmid expressing blue
fluorescent protein driven by a CMV promoter.
- 4) NUNU-01 at a ratio of 4:1 to a 0.5 mg/mL solution of a plasmid expressing blue
fluorescent protein driven by a CMV promoter.
- 5) NUNU-01 at a ratio of 1.25:1 to a 0.5 mg/mL solution of a plasmid expressing blue
fluorescent protein driven by a CMV promoter.
- 6) Superfect (Qiagen) according to the manufacturer's recommendation at a 5:1 charge
ratio to a 0.5 mg/mL solution of a plasmid expressing blue fluorescent protein driven
by a CMV promoter.
[0070] About 1.0 mL of each solution was added to 70 % confluent HA-VSMC primary human aortic
smooth muscle cells (passage 21; ATCC, Rockville, MD) on a six well plate and grown
in M-199 with 10% serum for 48 hours. Low magnification photographs (10X total) were
obtained at 60 degrees, 180 degrees and 200 degrees from the top of each well using
a Nikon E600 epi-fluorescence microscope with a blue fluorescent protein filter and
plan apochromat lenses. Image Pro Plus 3.0 image analysis suite was employed to determine
the percent of total cell area that was positive, and reported as efficiency of gene
delivery. Wells were subsequently evaluated in a dye exclusion assay (viable cells
exclude dye, while nonviable ones cannot), followed by solubilization in 0.4% SDS
in phosphate buffered saline. Samples were evaluated in a Spectronic Genesys 5 UV/VIS
spectrophotometer at 595 nm wavelength (blue) to quantitate nonviable cells as a direct
measure of transfection agent toxicity.
[0071] Results for efficiencies are as follows (mean +/- Standard Error):
- 1) 0.163+/-0.106%
- 2) 10.642 +/- 2.195 %
- 3) 8.797+/- 3.839%
- 4) 15.035 +/- 1.098 %
- 5) 17.574+/- 6.807%
- 6) 1.199 +/- 0.573 %
[0072] Runs #4 and #5 exhibit statistically significant (P<0.05 by one factor ANOVA repeated
measures with Fisher PLSD and TUKEY-A posthoc testing) enhancement of gene delivery
efficiency relative to both polylysine alone and Superfect. Mean toxicity data are
as follows:
Saline-0.057 A; 1) 3.460 A; 2) 0.251 A; 3) 0.291 A; 4) 0.243 A 5) 0.297 A; and 6)
0.337 A
[0073] As a result, a less toxic, more efficient gene delivery can be accomplished with
a ratio of 1.25 to 4.0 of NUNU-01 to DNA.
Example 4
[0074] This example illustrates the transdermal delivery of therapeutic agents using compositions
of the present invention.
Biotinylation of K and KNR:
[0075] Backbones of polylysine (K) and polylysine having attached efficiency groups (KNR)
were biotinylated with sulfo-NHS esters of biotin.
[0076] Materials: Protein K and KNR, having approximate MW = 112,000 were used with Sulfo-NHS-LC Biotin,
MW = 556 (Pierce Scientific, Rockford, IL).
[0077] Methods: The same method and calculations were used for K and KNR, since both have similar
molecular weights. The method for KNR is detailed below.
- 1. Prepared stock KNR solution at concentration of 1 mg / mL (8.9 x 10-6 mmol / mL) in phosphate buffered saline.
- 2. Prepared stock solution of Sulfo-NHS-LC-Biotin at 10 mg/mL concentration in deionized
water immediately prior to use. The amount of biotin reagent to add to generate a
40-fold molar excess of biotin reagent was calculated for a 1 mg/mL protein solution.
Calculation:
[0078]
- mol protein * 40 fold molar excess = mmol of Sulfo-NHS-LC-Biotin 8.9 x 10-6 mmol Dextran * 40 fold = 3.57 x 10-4 mmol of Sulfo-NHS-LC-Biotin reagent to add
=> 3.57 x 10-4 mmol of Sulfo-NHS-LC-Biotin * 556 MW of Sulfo-NHS-LC Biotin = 1.98 mg of Sulfo-NHS-LC-Biotin
reagent to add Therefore, added 200 mL of Sulfo-NHS-LC-Biotin stock solution (total
of 2.0 mg) to 1.0 mL KNR stock solution.
3. Incubated the test tube containing protein and biotin reagent at room temperature
for 30 minutes.
4. Added reaction mixture to a microdialyzer (molecular weight cutoff of 30 KD, Pierce,
Scientific, Rockford, IL) and centrifuged at 4,000 x g to remove unreacted biotin.
Washed and re-dialyzed with 2.0 volumes of PBS. Labeled the product "KNR-B."
Biotinylation of insulin:
[0079] Insulin was also biotinylated with sulfo-NHS esters of biotin.
[0080] Materials: Insulin, MW = 5733.5 (Sigma Chemical, St Louis, MO) and Sulfo-NHS-LC Biotin, MW =
556 (Pierce Scientific, Rockford, IL).
Methods:
[0081]
- 1. Prepared stock insulin solution at concentration of 10 mg/mL (1.74 x 10-3 mmol/mL insulin) in phosphate buffered saline.
- 2. Prepared stock solution of Sulfo-NHS-LC-Biotin at 10 mg/mL concentration in deionized
water immediately prior to use. Calculated amount of biotin reagent to add to generate
a 12-fold molar excess of biotin reagent to a 1 mg/mL protein solution.
Calculation:
[0082]
- Calculated mmoles of Biotin reagent to add:
mol protein * 12 fold molar excess = mmol of reagent 1.74 x 10-3 mmol insulin * 12 fold = 2.09 x 10-2 mmol of Sulfo-NHS-LC-Biotin reagent to add
⇒ 2.09 x 10-2 mmol * 556 MW of Sulfo-NHS-LC Biotin = 11.64 mg of Sulfo-NHS-LC-Biotin reagent to
add
Therefore, added 1.164 mL of Sulfo-NHS-LC-Biotin stock solution (total of 11.64 mg)
to 1.0 mL insulin stock solution.
3. Incubated the test tube containing insulin and biotin reagent at room temperature
for 30 minutes. Labeled the product "insulin-B."
Harvesting skin:
[0083] The backskin of an 8-week old female C57BL mouse was harvested for transdermal treatment
to see whether biotinylated backbone and/or insulin get across skin.
Method:
[0084]
- 1. After euthanizing a c57 BL6 mouse in a CO2 chamber, approximately 6 cm2 of dorsal skin of the mouse was harvested using a surgical scissors.
- 2. The skin was divided into six uniform pieces and placed each on one well of a 6-well
plate.
- 3. Added Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium (DMEM) to each plate well.
- 4. Prepared a 24 well plate for pinning the harvested skin. Placed small pieces of
sponge into each well.
- 5. Cut the harvested skin samples into five smaller sections and placed each section
on top of the sponge.
- 6. Pinned the edges of the harvested skin with four needles.
- 7. Added DMEM to each well, but was cautious not to submerge the harvest skin in the
medium.
- 8. Incubated the plate on ice until treatments were ready to be applied.
Preparing transdermal treatments:
[0085] 1. The following six treatments were prepared in 2 mL of Cetaphil lotion (Galderma):
TUBES |
AGENT |
BIOTINYLATED BACKBONE (+/-) |
PROTEIN (INSULIN): AGENT |
BIOTINYLATED PROTEIN (+/-) |
A. |
KNR |
+ |
1:1 |
- |
B. |
KNR |
+ |
1:3 |
- |
C. |
K |
+ |
1:1 |
- |
D. |
K |
+ |
1:3 |
- |
E. |
K |
- |
1:3 |
+ |
F. |
KNR |
- |
1:3 |
+ |
2. For tube A to D, added 200 µg of KNR or K in 2 mL of Cetaphil lotion to each tube
and mixed uniformly. Added 1 mL of Poly-L-Lysine (K) without biotin to each tube and
mixed uniformly.
3. For tube E, added 200 µg of KNR in 2 mL of Cetaphil lotion and mixed uniformly.
4. Made a 200-fold dilution of biotinylated insulin by adding 5.11 µL in approximately
995 µL of PBS.
Calculated protein dissolved in PBS: |
|
KNR = 8.9 x 10-9 mol/mL |
|
K=8.9x10-9 mol/mL |
|
Insulin =1.74 x 10-6 mol/mL |
Calculated protein in the tubes: |
|
KNR = 8.9 x 10-10 mol/mL |
|
K = 8.9 x 10-10mol/mL1 |
5. For tubes E and F, added 33 µL of diluted biotinylated insulin solution and 70
µL of PBS and mixed uniformly.
6. For tubes A and C, added 100 µL of regular insulin and mixed uniformly.
7. For tubes B and D, added 33 µL of regular insulin and 70 µL of PBS and mixed uniformly.
Time points of treatments:
[0086]
- 1. Removed the harvested skin plate from ice incubation.
- 2. Applied each tube to the appropriate column of pinned skin samples.
- 3. Transferred harvest skin to -35°C freezer at the end of each time points of 15,
30, 60 minutes and 17 hours. Kept the harvest skin frozen overnight.
- 4. Took the frozen harvest skin samples and place it on ice incubation.
- 5. Cut the harvest skin samples that have been frozen at time points into smaller
three sections.
- 6. Transferred one section into a tube with formaldehyde.
- 7. Transferred second section into an empty tube and place it into the freezer for
storage.
- 8. Frozen third section in O.C.T. compound in liquid acetone and dry ice solution.
Placed the frozen samples into the freezer for frozen sections.
[0087] Material: NeutraAvidin
™ Alkaline Phosphate Conjugated (Pierce Scientific, Rockford, IL); Tris-HCl buffer,
pH= 7.2 (Pierce Scientific, Rockford, IL); NBT/BCIP solution (Pierce Scientific, Rockford,
IL).
Method:
[0088]
- 1. Added 50 µL of NeutraAvidin™ and took the volume up to 50 mL with Tris-HCl buffer.
- 2. Added 1 mL of NeutraAvidin™ and buffer solution to each tube of harvested skin samples.
- 3. Ran the tubes of harvested skin samples for 1 hour in the NeutraAvidin™ and buffer solution.
- 4. Added 1 mL of NBT/BCIP each to new empty tubes and labeled each tube.
- 5. Removed the skin from NeutraAvidin™ and buffer solution. Rinsed the skin in PBS four times and placed it into appropriate
NBT/BCIP tubes.
- 6. Ran the tubes of harvested skin samples for 1 hour in the NBT/BCIP solution.
- 7. Rinsed skin in 1 mL of cold PBS again.
- 8. Stored the harvested skin samples in the labeled tubes.
- 9. Bisected skin samples and photographed bisected face.
Results:
[0089]
Formulation |
Timepoint |
Figure |
Notes |
A |
15 minutes |
3 |
A1- high level delivery of KNR backbone across all layers |
A |
17 hours |
4 |
A4 - high level delivery of KNR backbone across all layers |
C |
15 minutes |
5 |
C1-passive delivery ofK backbone at follicles and outer layer of epidermis |
c |
17 hours |
6 |
C4 - very low level delivery of K backbone |
E |
15 minutes |
7 |
E1 - very low level delivery of therapeutic factor by K |
E |
17 hours |
8 |
E4 - very low level delivery of therapeutic factor by K |
F |
15 minutes |
9 |
F1 - high level delivery of therapeutic factor across all layers by KNR |
F |
17 hours |
10 |
F4 - high level delivery of therapeutic factor across all layers by KNR |
[0090] Figures 3-10 depict representative photomicrographs of results obtained after 15
minutes (Figures 3, 5, 7, 9) and 17 hours (Figures 4, 6, 8, 10) delivery of formulation
A (Figures 3 and 4), formulation C (Figures 5 and 6), formulation E (Figures 7 and
8), and formulation F (Figures 9 and 10). Control groups receiving complexes with
K as the positively charged backbone exhibit low-level passive transfer of backbone
primarily to follicles (Figures 5 and 6), but virtually no delivery of therapeutic
agent (Figures 7 and 8). In contrast, groups treated with complexes containing KNR
exhibit high-level delivery of both backbone (Figures 3 and 4) and therapeutic agent
(Figures 9 and 10) to all levels of the epidermis and dermis. Thus, the formulation
provided in this example allows efficient transdermal delivery of a therapeutic agent.
Example 5
[0091] This example illustrates the targeted delivery of a composition using attached F(ab)
2 fragments.
General:
[0092] An IgG antibody was cleaved to generate an F(ab)
2 fragment, then purified to remove Fc and intact IgG. The F(ab)
2 fragment was then condensed with an aldehyde activated (oxidized) dextran. Excess
aldehydes were quenched with tris and free hydroxyls were phosphorylated to generate
a highly negatively charged dextranphosphate with F(ab)
2 fragments covalently bonded (collectively referred to as "targeting component").
A self-assembling complex was then formed between this targeting component, insulin,
and the positively charged backbone having an efficiency component ("KNR"). The ability
of the self-assembled complex to enhance delivery of the complex to cells bearing
the target antigen was then evaluated.
F(ab)2 cleavage:
[0093] F(ab)
2 fragments recognizing smooth muscle cells were generated by an immobilized pepsin
(Pierce Chemical, Rockford, IL) digest of IgG for smooth muscle α-actin (clone 1A9,
DAKO, Carpinteria, CA).
Method:
[0094]
- 1. Dialyzed clone 1A9 at 1 mg/mL against a 20 mM sodium acetate buffer at pH 4.5.
- 2. Immobilized Pepsin was supplied as a 50% (v/v) aqueous slurry containing 50% glycerol
in 0.1 M sodium acetate, pH 4.5, plus 0.05% sodium azide. Mixed Pepsin gel-glycerol-water
slurry by inversion.
- 3. Added 0.25 mL of 50% slurry of Immobilized Pepsin to a glass test tube (0.125 mL
of Immobilized Pepsin gel).
- 4. Added 4.0 mL of 20 mM sodium acetate (pH 4.0) in deionized water ("digestion buffer").
Mixed well by inversion. Separated gel from buffer using a serum separator or centrifugation
at approximately 1000 x g for five minutes. Discarded buffer and repeated this wash
procedure with another 4.0 mL of buffer.
- 5. Resuspended the Immobilized Pepsin in 0.5 mL of digestion buffer.
- 6. Generation of Fragments: Added 1.0 mL of dialyzed 1A9 IgG to the tube containing
Immobilized Pepsin. Incubated the tube in a shaking water, bath at 37°C at high speed
for four hours. Maintained constant mixing of gel during the incubation.
- 7. Added 1.5 mL of 10 mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.5 to test tube. Separated the solubilized
F(ab')2 and Fc and undigested IgG from the Immobilized Pepsin gel using a serum separator
tube. Centrifuged at 1000 x g for five minutes and removed the supernatant containing
the fragments.
F(ab)2 purification:
[0095] Separation of F(ab)
2 fragments from undigested IgG and Fc fragments was carried out using an Immobilized
Protein A Column.
[0096] Materials: Protein Sample made of Pepsin + Tris-HCl; Buffer A (0.2 M NaH
2PO
4 (2.4 g used), 0.15 M NaCl (8.8 g used), QS adjusted volume to 1 liter with deionized
H
2O and tested pH for 8.0); Buffer B (0.2 M Na
2HPO
4 (0.676 g), 0.1 M Citric Acid (22.5 ml), deionized H
2O (46.3 ml), adjusted pH to 4.5).
[0097] Method: (Note: Use of Buffer A).
- 1. Packed micropipet with cotton uniformly as possible.
- 2. Made a 1:1 suspension of resin in Buffer A. (Added 1000 µL of Buffer A in resin.
Poured 1 mL suspension into column. Allowed column to flow as it is settling. When
it was settled, the column was washed with 10 mL of Buffer A).
- 3. Slowly added protein sample to column.
- 4. Eluted F(ab)2 fragment with 12 mL of Buffer A. F(ab)2 eluate total volume (including column load) was thus 14.4 mL.
- 5. Stripped unreacted IgG and Fc fragments from column with 1.5 mL of Buffer B.
- 6. Measured and recorded absorbance using a spectrophotometer (Spectronic Genesys
5) to confirm protein in eluates. The following are the recorded spectronic values:
COLUMN FRACTIONS |
VALUES |
H2O |
- 0.032 |
H2O and A |
+ 0.009 |
H2O and B |
+ 0.012 |
F (ab)2 concentration:
[0098] The F(ab)
2 eluate was purified and concentrated using Tricholoroacetic Acid (TCA) Protein Precipitation.
Methods:
[0099]
- 1. Added an equal volume of 20 % TCA (w/v, in deionized water, Sigma Chemical, St
Louis, MO) to the F(ab)2 column eluate.
- 2. Incubated sample for 30 minutes on ice.
- 3. Centrifuged sample in microcentrifuge at 4000 x g for 15 minutes at 4 °C.
- 4. Carefully removed all of the supernatant.
- 5. Added 300 µL of cold acetone to each tube and centrifuged again at 4000 x g for
5 minutes at 4 °C.
- 6. Removed the supernatant and allowed the F(ab)2 to dry.
- 7. Suspended F(ab)2 protein pellet in 1.0 mL of phosphate buffered saline.
Coupling of F(ab)2 to aldehyde-activated dextran:
[0100] Materials: Aldehyde-Activated Dextran Coupling Kit (Pierce, Rockford, IL). [Note: Aldehyde-activated
dextran can also be generated through periodate treatment of dextran.]
Methods:
[0101]
- 1. Brought Aldehyde-Activated Dextran Coupling Kit to room temperature.
- 2. Prepared 0.5 mL of a 64 mg/mL stock solution of sodium cyanoborohydride in phosphate
buffered saline (32 mg in 0.5 mL).
- 3. Prepared 1.0 mL of a 5 mg/mL Aldehyde-Activated Dextran stock solution in phosphate
buffered saline.
- 4. Added 1.0 mL of purified, concentrated F(ab)2 from above to 1.0 mL of Aldehyde-Activated Dextran stock solution.
- 5. Added 0.2 mL of sodium cyanoborohydride stock solution to the aldehyde-F(ab)2 mixture. Mixed by vortex and incubated overnight in the dark at room temperature.
- 6. After overnight incubation, blocked any remaining aldehyde groups by adding 0.5
mL of 1.0 M Tris-HCl, pH 7.2 to the reaction mixture. Incubated the solution at room
temperature for 1 hour.
- 7. Product is labeled "F(ab)2(aact)-d-t" with total volume of 2.7 mL.
- 8. An identical procedure was carried out using 1.0 mL deionized water in place of
F(ab)2 mixture. The product was labeled "d-t" and represents a control that does not target
a specific antigen.
Phosphorylation of F(ab)2(aact)-d-t:
[0102]
1. Prepared stock solution of 50 mg/mL polyphosphoric acid (Acros Organics, Pittsburgh,
PA) in deionized water.
1. Added 100 µL of polyphosphoric acid stock solution to 1.0 mL of F(ab)2(aact)-d-t, and incubated for 60 minutes at room temperature.
3. Added reaction mixture to a microdialyzer (molecular weight cutoff of 30 KD, Pierce,
Scientific, Rockford, IL) and centrifuged at 4,000 x g to remove unreacted polyphosphoric
acid. Washed and re-dialyzed with 2.0 volumes of PBS pH 7.4. Product was labeled "F(ab)2(aact)-d-t-p" and represents a negatively charged polymer with an attached F(ab)2 fragement to afford targeting.
4. An identical procedure was carried out using 1.0 mL of d-t in place of F(ab)2(aact)-d-t. The product was labeled "d-t-p" and represents a negatively charged polymer
control that does not target a specific antigen.
Targeting of therapeutic complex delivery to cells bearing a particular antigen (smooth
muscle cell α-actin):
[0103] 1. Male New Zealand White rabbits (3.0-3.5 kg) were used in accordance to NIH and
institutional guidelines (n=3 animals). Under general anesthesia (ketamine/xylazine
induction and halothane maintenance), right common femoral artery was isolated and
adventitia circumferentially exposed. A 2mm x 2cm SAVVY angioplasty balloon (Cordis,
Miami, FL) was introduced via arteriotomy in the superficial femoral artery and advanced
into the common femoral artery. The balloon was inflated to 6 atm in two 1-minute
cycles then withdrawn.
2. 28 days after mechanical dilation, arteries were perfusion-fixed and harvested.
Harvested arteries (approximately 1.5 cm in length) were post-fixed in 10% neutral
buffered formalin for 12-16 hours and divided into three equal segments prior to paraffin
embedding. Serial (5µm) cross-sections were obtained from the proximal (cranial) face
of each segment.
3. Deparaffinized and rehydrated sections (n=9 per group). Blocked nonspecific binding
sites with BLOTTO (Pierce Scientific, Rockford, IL), and rinsed with phosphate buffered
saline.
4. Labeled treatments "1p" and "2p"to correspond to the following treatment
compositions: [NOTE: "KNR-B" prepared as above]
|
Efficiency agent (E) |
Targeting agent (T) |
Protein (P) |
Ratio |
|
|
|
|
E:T:P |
1p |
KNR-B |
F(ab)2(aact)-d-t-p |
Insulin |
2:1:1 |
2p |
KNR-B |
d-t-p |
Insulin |
2:1:1 |
Mixed 180 µL of phosphate buffered saline, 5 µL of protein therapeutic and 5 µL targeting
agent (both negative net surface charge) in a microfuge tube and vortexed for 15 seconds.
Added 10 µL of targeting agent (positively charged) and immediately vortexed for 60
seconds. Using capillary gap methods, incubated 9 sections each with either 1p or
2p at room temperature overnight.
5. Rinsed slides and incubated overnight in 1:100 dilution ofNeutravidin-Alkaline
phosphatase (Pierce Scientific, Rockford, IL).
6. Rinsed slides and incubated in NBT/BCIP (Pierce Scientific, Rockford, IL;
substrate for alkaline phosphatase) for 15 minutes. Rinsed with saline and photographed.
[0104] As shown in Figure 11, sections from 1P treatments reveal an increase in positive
(blue-purple) staining in the media of the cross sections (primarily composed of smooth
muscle cells bearing high levels of α-actin) relative to 2P sections which show most
intense staining in the adventitia, and reveal no specific targeting enhancement for
smooth muscle cells, as depicted in Figure 12. Thus, complexes bearing F(ab)
2(aact)-d-t-p exhibit relative increases in specific delivery to smooth muscle cells,
and delivery of therapeutic agents can thus have targeted enhancements in efficiencies
for cells bearing particular antigens.
[0105] It is understood that the examples and embodiments described herein are for illustrative
purposes only and that various modifications or changes in light thereof will be suggested
to persons skilled in the art and are to be included within the spirit and purview
of this application and scope of the appended claims. All publications, patents, and
patent applications cited herein are hereby incorporated by reference in their entirety
for all purposes.
ASPECTS OF THE INVENTION
[0106]
- 1. A composition comprising a non-covalent association complex of :
- a) a positively-charged backbone; and
- b) at least two members selected from the group consisting of:
- i) a first negatively-charged backbone having a plurality of attached imagingmoieties;
- ii) a second negatively-charged backbone having a plurality of attached targeting
agents;
- iii) at least one member selected from the group consisting of RNA, DNA, ribozymes,
modified oligonucleotides and cDNA encoding a selectedtransgene;
- iv) DNA encoding at least one persistence factor; and v) a third negatively-charged
backbone having a plurality of attached biological agents;
wherein said association complex carries a net positive charge and at least one of
said two members from group b) is selected from groups i), iii) or v).
- 2. A composition in accordance with aspect 1, wherein said biological agent is a therapeutic
agent.
- 3. A composition in accordance with aspect 2, wherein said therapeutic agent is selected
from the group consisting of VEGF, botulinum toxin, a blocker of VEGF, and insulin.
- 4. A composition in accordance with aspect 1, wherein said biological agent is a cosmeceutical
agent.
- 5. A composition in accordance with aspect 4, wherein said cosmeceutical agent is
Epidermal growth factor.
- 6. A composition in accordance with aspect 1, comprising at least three members selected
from groups i) through v).
- 7. A composition in accordance with aspect 1, comprising at least one member from
each of groups i), ii), iii) and iv).
- 8. A composition in accordance with aspect 1, comprising at least one member from
each of groups i) and ii).
- 9. A composition in accordance with aspect 1, comprising at least one member from
each of groups ii), iii) and iv).
- 10. A composition in accordance with aspect 1, wherein said positively charged backbone
has a length of from about 1 to 4 times the combined lengths of said members from
group b).
- 11. A composition in accordance with aspect 1, wherein said positively charged backbone
comprises a polymer having attached positively charged branching groups.
- 12. A composition in accordance with aspect 11, wherein said polymer is a peptide
and said positively charged branching groups are selected from the group consisting
of -(gly)-n-arg-arg-arg-arg-arg-arg-arg, HIV-TAT and fragments thereof, wherein the subscript
n is an integer of from 0 to 20.
- 13. A composition in accordance with aspect 12, wherein n is an integer of from 0
to 8.
- 14. A composition in accordance with aspect 12, wherein n is an integer of from 2
to 5.
- 15. A composition in accordance with aspect 12, wherein said HIV TAT fragment has
the fonnula (gly)p-RGRKKRRQRRR-(gly)q, wherein the subscripts p and q are each independently integers of from 0 to 20,
and said HIV-TAT fragment is attached to said positively charged backbone via either
the C-terminus or the N-terminus.
- 16. A composition in accordance with aspect 15, wherein the subscripts p and q are
each independently integers of from 0 to 8.
- 17. A composition in accordance with aspect 15, wherein the subscripts p and q are
each independently integers of from 2 to 5.
- 18. A composition in accordance with aspect 11, wherein said polymer is a polylysine
and said positively charged branching groups are attached to the lysine sidechain
amino groups and are selected from the group consisting of-gly-gly-gly-arg-arg-arg-arg-arg-arg-arg
and HIV-TAT.
- 19. A composition comprising a non-covalent association complex of a positively-charged
backbone having at least one attached efficiency group and at least one nucleic acid
member selected from the group consisting of RNA, DNA, ribozymes, modified oligonucleotides
and cDNA encoding a selected transgene.
- 20. A composition in accordance with aspect 19, wherein said positively charged backbone
is polylysine.
- 21. A composition in accordance with aspect 19, wherein said efficiency group is selected
from the group consisting of (Gly)n1-(Arg)n2, wherein the subscript nl is an integer of from 3 to about 5, and the subscript n2
is an odd integer of from about 7 to about 17, and TAT domains.
- 22. A composition in accordance with aspect 19, wherein said positively charged backbone
having at least one attached efficiency group is a 150,000 to 300,000 polylysine backbone
having a plurality of attached Gly3Arg7 groups wherein the degree of lysine saturation is from about 5% to about 30%.
- 23. A composition in accordance with aspect 19, wherein said nucleic acid member is
cDNA encoding a selected transgene.
- 24. A composition in accordance with aspect 19, wherein said nucleic acid member is
part of a plasmid that expresses a detectable product.
- 25. A composition in accordance with aspect 24, wherein said detectable product is
a fluorescent protein.
- 26. A composition in accordance with aspect 24, wherein said detectable product is
a blue fluorescent protein.
- 27. A composition in accordance with aspect 24, wherein said plasmid further comprises
a CMV promoter.
- 28. A method for delivery of a biological agent to a cell surface in a subject, said
method comprising administering to said subject a composition comprising:
- (a) a positively charged backbone;
- (b) at least one biological agent selected from the group consisting of:
- (i) a first negatively charged backbone having a plurality of attached imaging moieties;
- (ii) at least one member selected from the group consisting of RNA, DNA, ribozymes,
modified oligonucleotides and cDNA encoding a selected transgene; and
- (iii) a third negatively charged backbone having a plurality of attached therapeutic
agents; and
- (c) a second negatively charged backbone having a plurality of attached targeting
agents; wherein said composition is a non-covalent association complex of said positively
charged backbone, said biological agent and said second negatively charged backbone
having a plurality of attached targeting agents, and carries a net positive charge.
- 29. A method in accordance with aspect 28, wherein said biological agent is an oligonucleotide
or a cDNA encoding a selected transgene, and said composition further comprises DNA
encoding at least one persistence factor.
- 30. A method in accordance with aspect 28, wherein said biological agent is a
first
negatively charged backbone having a plurality of attached imaging moieties.
- 31. A method in accordance with aspect 28, wherein said biological agent is a third
negatively charged backbone having a plurality of attached therapeutic agents.
- 32. A method in accordance with aspect 28, wherein said administering is intravenous.
- 33. A method in accordance with aspect 28, wherein said administering is transdermal.
- 34. A method in accordance with aspect 28, wherein said administering is carried out
using an angioplastic balloon.
- 35. A method in accordance with aspect 28, wherein said administering is carried out
using a catheter.
- 36. A method in accordance with aspect 28, wherein said administering is intraperitoneal.
- 37. A method in accordance with aspect 28, wherein said composition is in a gel formulation.
- 38. A method for preparing a pharmaceutical composition, said method comprising combining
a positively charged backbone component and at least two members selected from the
group consisting of:
- i) a first negatively-charged backbone having a plurality of attached imaging moieties;
- ii) a second negatively-charged backbone having a plurality of attached targeting
agents;
- iii) at least member selected from the group consisting of RNA, DNA, ribozymes, modified
oligonucleotides and cDNA encoding a selected transgene;
- iv) DNA encoding at least one persistence factor; and
- v) a third negatively-charged backbone having a plurality of attached therapeutic
agents; with a pharmaceutically acceptable carrier to form a non-covalent association
complex having a net positive charge, with the proviso that at least one of said two
members from groups i) through v) is selected from groups i), iii) or v).
- 39. A kit for formulating a pharmaceutical delivery composition, said kit comprising
a positively charged backbone component and at least two members selected from the
group consisting of:
- i) a first negatively-charged backbone having a plurality of attached imaging moieties;
- ii) a second negatively-charged backbone having a plurality of attached targeting
agents;
- iii) at least one member selected from the group consisting of RNA, DNA, ribozymes,
modified oligonucleotides and cDNA encoding a selectedtransgene;
- iv) DNA encoding at least one persistence factor; and
- v) a third negatively-charged backbone having a plurality of attached therapeutic
agents; and instructions for preparing said pharmaceutical delivery composition.